This week on AG:
Sometimes when you’re busy selling homes, it’s hard to read every single article on the web that you want to, so we’re doing our best to highlight some top reading for the week for expediency.
This week, there lists took the cake and an interesting article from years ago popped up as quite widely read. There was a lot of interest in ethics this week which I suspect will continue over the coming months as a focus.
So, if you missed any of these stories, here are the top 10 most widely read AG articles of the week:
- Forbes’ Top Ten Best Housing Markets Across America by Lani Rosales
- Bank of America Retard Division for Short Sales by Russell Shaw
- How About NO Commercial Real Estate Data At All? by Duke Long
- Top 10 Cities for a Real Estate Bargain by Lani Rosales
- Would You Buy a House With This MLS Description? by Lani Rosales
- Smile! Your Showing Skills Are On Candid Camera. by Ken Brand
- In a World of Amazon and Yelp Reviews #RTB Is Very Easy by Janie Coffey
- Slumlord or Savvy Investor? You Tell Me by Lesley Lambert
- Welcome to Social Media for Real Estate 101: Twitter by Daniel Rothamel
- 10 Things I Wish They Taught in Real Estate School by Jonathan Benya
Top 10 Most Read Articles of weeks past:
If you want to catch up for this year, here are the Top 10 lists from every week so far:
- Top 10 of the week ending February 19
- Top 10 of the week ending February 12
- Top 10 of the week ending February 5
- Top 10 of the week ending January 29
- Top 10 of the week ending January 22
- Top 10 of the week ending January 15
- Top 10 of the week ending January 08
- Top 10 of the week ending January 02
The Top 10 is an automated calculation based on traffic through tweets, retweets, facebook postings, organic traffic, etc. The trending topics of the day can be found at any time on the sidebar of AG which reset daily.
Lani is the COO and News Director at The American Genius, has co-authored a book, co-founded BASHH, Austin Digital Jobs, Remote Digital Jobs, and is a seasoned business writer and editorialist with a penchant for the irreverent.
